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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › MandorlaMandorla - Wikipedia

    A mandorla is an almond-shaped aureola, i.e. a frame that surrounds the totality of an iconographic figure. It is usually synonymous with vesica , a lens shape. Mandorlas often surround the figures of Jesus Christ and the Virgin Mary in traditional Christian iconography . [1]

  2. Mandorla is an Italian word for an almond-shaped halo that surrounds a holy figure in Christian and Buddhist art. Learn about its origins, uses, and meanings in different religious contexts, as well as the concept of doppelgänger in German folklore.

  3. One of the best examples in this regard is the mandorla as a visual sign of the indescribable phenomenon of God’s Glory, mentioned in the Old and the New Testaments. Byzantine art had established two main types of mandorla representing the spatio-temporal and resplendent manifestations of the Glory of God.

  4. www.encyclopedia.com › art-general › mandorlaMandorla | Encyclopedia.com

    May 14, 2018 · mandorla (män´dôrlä), [Ital.,=almond], a medieval Christian artistic convention by which an oval or almond-shaped area or series of lines surrounds a deity, most commonly Jesus. The mandorla is thought to have derived from either Greek or Roman prototypes.

  5. Jan 1, 2016 · Enriched by the mystical meaning of the Pythagorean vesica piscis it forms the visual symbol of mandorla as a visual representation of the divine space in which God dwells.

  6. Aug 14, 2007 · The mandorla or the nimbus is an iconographic symbol in the shape of a circle or an almond-shaped oval signifying heaven, Divine Glory, or Light. Mandorla is Italian for "almond."

  7. Rhombicuboctahedron by Leonardo da Vinci. A mandorla is an aureola, or frame, usually in the shape of a vesica piscis, which surrounds the figures of Christ and the Virgin Mary in traditional Christian art.